The Scottish Government originally said it wanted to cut the new tax by 50 per cent, before eventually scrapping it completely.

However the Scottish Greens have said their support for the budget may depend on what final position the Scottish Government takes.

Patrick Harvie MSP, the party's finance and economy spokesperson, said an opinion poll for the party showed only one in four Scots supported the cut.

“Today’s statement is a chance for Scottish Ministers to show they are listening," he said.

"They must set the first rates and bands soon, and if it amounts to a tax cut for the airlines, they cannot expect to sit down with Green MSPs to agree a budget that implements those cuts. Holyrood’s priorities should be making Scotland fairer and building a clean economy, not giving an undertaxed grossly-polluting industry a free ride."

The Liberal Democrats also voted against the proposals in June.

Energy spokesperson Liam McArthur MSP said:

“It took years of expert advice and public consultations before the SNP finally bowed to the need to ban fracking for the sake of our environment and climate.

“Now the Scottish Government need to stand up to the aviation industry and change course over their reckless plan to slash airline taxes and pump tens of thousands of tonnes of additional emissions into the atmosphere.